This website requires javascript to be enabled. Please enable this feature in your browser before continuing or you will experience a degraded user experience.

Welcome to 1st Source Bank! Our system detects the security of your connection is outdated. Please do not enter any confidential information on our site until you upgrade your browser to its latest version. Out-of-date browser software provides an opportunity for scams and could expose your financial data to fraud. 1st Source values the safety and security of our clients' accounts and information.

Should you have any questions or continue to have an issue, please contact our Customer Service Center at (574) 235-2000 or (800) 513-2360. Thank you for your cooperation and patience.

Our system cannot verify the security of your device. Please click here to try a page refresh. If you continue to get this message, please do not enter any confidential information on our site. 1st Source values the safety and security of our clients' accounts and information.

Should you have any questions or continue to have an issue, please contact our Customer Service Center at (574) 235-2000 or (800) 513-2360. Thank you for your cooperation and patience.

Welcome to 1st Source Bank! Your Internet Explorer browser is viewing our site in "Compatibility Mode". To properly view our site, we ask to follow these four simple steps to remove 1stsource.com from Compatibility View. This should take only a minute to resolve.

Should you continue to have an issue, please contact our Customer Service Center at (574) 235-2000 or (800) 513-2360. Thank you for your cooperation and patience.

Welcome to 1st Source Bank. To avoid feature functionally loss on 1stsource.com, potential interruption to your online banking and to assure better protection of your device, update the browser you are using as soon as possible. Out-of-date browser software provides an opportunity for scams and could expose your financial data to fraud. 1st Source values the safety and security of our clients' accounts.

For security reasons, we could soon disable access to 1st Source Online Banking for anyone using an out of date browser. Update your Internet browser today. For instructions on how to perform the update contact a reputable computer professional for assistance.

Protecting Yourself Online

The internet connects people, providing amazing opportunities for you to connect with family, friends, businesses, and much more, but all of this connectivity comes with inherent risks too. As much as you want to share things with the right people, you need to protect yourself from sharing things with the wrong people.

There are many steps you can take toward protecting yourself while still enjoying online activities:

Use anti-virus / anti-spyware software.

Keep your internet browser up to date. Software updates frequently include security fixes, so the longer you take to update your software, the longer you are vulnerable to known threats. Enabling automatic updates can make this process simpler.

Take passwords seriously. You keep important things like bank information or credit card numbers in accounts with passwords. So follow all of those things you hear: choose a mix of letters and special characters, resist making it easy to guess, and don’t use the same password for every online service.

Those security questions you have to answer? Use fake information. Information like your mother’s maiden name is relatively easy to find out, so rather than using the real thing and risking someone resetting your password, choose a fake answer instead.

If you’re accessing the internet on a public network, take extra care. Make sure your firewall is running. Make sure your e-mail program is using a secure connection. Visit secure sites (with https / a padlock icon) when possible.

Download cautiously. A file may not be what it seems, so only download files from trusted sources and with known file types.

If you upload photos to a social network, disable the automatic location feature. Location data can pinpoint users with unsettling accuracy.

Also, when you’re creating a profile on a social network or other website, don’t share these pieces of information:

Home address

Personal phone number

Birthdate or place of birth

Mother’s maiden name

These pieces of information can be a great starting place for an identity thief, so making them public is risky. Providing false information for these fields can help reduce the risk considerably.

By following these steps, you can give yourself a fighting chance against would-be thieves.